+ Eric
On 8/10/2018 9:52 PM, Ben Greear wrote:
On 08/10/2018 12:28 PM, Arend van Spriel wrote:
On 8/10/2018 3:20 PM, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:
Arend van Spriel <arend.vanspriel@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
On 8/8/2018 9:00 PM, Peter Oh wrote:
On 08/08/2018 03:40 AM, Wen Gong wrote:
Add a field for ath10k to adjust the sk_pacing_shift, mac80211 set
the default value to 8, and ath10k will change it to 6. Then mac80211
will use the changed value 6 as sk_pacing_shift since 6 is the best
value for tx throughput by test result.
I don't think you can convince people with the numbers unless you
provide latency along with the numbers and also measurement result on
different chipsets as Michal addressed (QCA4019, QCA9984, etc.) From
users view point, I also agree on Toke that we cannot scarify latency
for the small throughput improvement.
Yeah. The wireless industry (admittedly that is me too :-p ) has been
focused on just throughput long enough.
Tell me about it ;)
All the preaching about bufferbloat from Dave and others is (just)
starting to sink in here and there.
Yeah, I've noticed; this is good!
Now as for the value of the sk_pacing_shift I think we agree it
depends on the specific device so in that sense the api makes sense,
but I think there are a lot of variables so I was wondering if we
could introduce a sysctl parameter for it. Does that make sense?
I'm not sure a sysctl parameter would make sense; for one thing, it
would be global for the host, while different network interfaces will
probably need different values. And for another, I don't think it's
something a user can reasonably be expected to set correctly, and I
think it *is* actually possible to pick a value that works well at the
driver level.
I not sure either. Do you think a user could come up with something
like this (found here [1]):
sysctl -w net.core.rmem_max=8388608
sysctl -w net.core.wmem_max=8388608
sysctl -w net.core.rmem_default=65536
sysctl -w net.core.wmem_default=65536
sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_rmem='4096 87380 8388608'
sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_wmem='4096 65536 8388608'
sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_mem='8388608 8388608 8388608'
sysctl -w net.ipv4.route.flush=1
Now the page listing this config claims this is for use "on Linux 2.4+
for high-bandwidth applications". Beats me if it still is correct in
4.17.
Anyway, sysctl is nice for parameterizing code that is built-in the
kernel so you don't need to rebuild it. mac80211 tends to be a module
in most distros so
maybe sysctl is not a good fit. So lets agree on that.
Picking a value at driver level may be possible, but a driver tends to
support a number of different devices. So how do you see the picking
work. Some static
table with entries for the different devices?
Some users are not going to care about latency, and for others, latency may
be absolutely important and they don't care about bandwidth.
So, it should be tunable. sysctl can support per network-device settings,
right? Or, probably could use ethtool API to set a per-netdev value as
well.
That might be nice for other network devices as well, not just wifi.
I was under the impression that the parameters are all global, but your
statement made me look. I came across some references here [2] so I
checked the kernel sources under net/ and found net/ipv4/devinet.c [3].
So that confirms it supports per-netdev settings.
The sk_pacing_shift is actually a socket setting although I did not find
a user-space api to change it. For instance it is not a socket option.
There might be a good reason for not exposing it to user-space (added Eric).
Regards,
Arend
[2]
https://askubuntu.com/questions/316492/disabling-ipv6-on-a-single-interface
[3] https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/net/ipv4/devinet.c#L2309